Le luminaire suspendu en verre ovale à 7 lumières pour îlot de cuisine est un ajout saisissant à tout décor moderne ou contemporain. Cette pièce comprend un ensemble de sept abat-jours ovales en verre transparent, chacun suspendu à un cadre au fini noir élégant. La base de l'ampoule E12 (non incluse) permet des ampoules plus petites et plus délicates qui complètent le design minimaliste du luminaire suspendu. Chaque abat-jour ovale en verre transparent est méticuleusement conçu pour fournir une vue claire et dégagée de la lumière à l'intérieur, créant un effet visuel éblouissant lorsque la lumière diffuse à travers le verre. L'agencement en grappe des abat-jour ajoute une touche dynamique et sophistiquée, faisant de ce luminaire suspendu un point central dans n'importe quelle pièce. La finition noire du cadre en métal offre un contraste saisissant avec le verre transparent, rehaussant l'esthétique moderne de la pièce. Cette combinaison de matériaux et de couleurs rend le luminaire suspendu assez polyvalent pour s'intégrer parfaitement à divers décors intérieurs, industriels et contemporains, traditionnels et éclectiques. Les lignes épurées et la conception simple mais élégante du luminaire suspendu en verre pour îlot de cuisine en font un choix idéal pour un large éventail d'espaces, y compris les salles à manger, les salons et les entrées.
I love the look of this light, but I do think it's inaccurate to call its length "adjustable". To make it shorter you will have to cut wires and redo the connections, and cut through the woven wire cover, which may mean you need to do something to prevent it from fraying. The wire that each light hangs from is very thick, and the canopy is quite small. Unlike lamps where the light hangs down on a thin cable, there is no room for more than *maybe* one inch of adjusted corded wire to be shoved up in the canopy. And this hangs like 6' down, so as-is it's only appropriate for very high ceilings: over a dining table maybe 12' ceilings, but if you need to be able to walk under it you'll want 14' minimum. Or an electrician. That said, it looks nice and appears generally well made. The globes are real glass and pretty thick and of uniform size and shape. You screw the globe on rather than using a set screw and it gives a nice neat finished look. I wasn't sure which bulbs I would choose, and I haven't got a dimmer on this circuit yet, so these pictures show it with a couple different chandelier bulbs I had around. The tubular one looks nice and modern and fits even tho the total length (incl base) is 3.46". The OG led globes I have also fit and surprisingly don't look terrible, but I would paint their white plastic bases black if I was going to keep them. These bulbs are all 40w equivalents and even with just 3 in place they are bright, definitely need a dimmer switch. I don't know how I'm going to deal with shortening it but I wanted to get it up and see if I liked it and make sure it worked before the return window passed, so I installed it, then used zip ties to shorten it, and I actually like the look, kind of industrial. It will do for now, my family thinks it looks bad, so I appreciate it's not for everyone in its current state. I'll post the pics and you be your judge. The globes are dirty in the pictures. I'm sure they will clean up well, but I'm holding off until I put the final bulbs in. For reference, these are 10' ceilings, and with the wires looped it's still hanging down over 42" from the ceiling.. Andrea. Boulder, CO. Wed Apr 22 2026